Grotesque Visions: The Science of Berlin Dada

Grotesque Visions: The Science of Berlin Dada

Grotesque Visions: The Science of Berlin Dada

Grotesque Visions: The Science of Berlin Dada

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Overview

Grotesque Visions focuses on the radical avant-garde interventions of Salomo Friedländer (aka Mynona), Til Brugman, and Hannah Höch as they challenged the questionable practices and evidentiary claims of late-19th- and early-20th-century science. Demonstrating the often excessive measures that pathologists, anthropologists, sexologists, and medical professionals went to present their research in a seemingly unambiguous way, this volume shows how Friedländer/Mynona, Brugman, Höch, and other Berlin-based artists used the artistic grotesque to criticize, satirize, and subvert a variety of forms of supposed scientific objectivity.

The volume concludes by examining the exhibition Grotesk!: 130 Jahre Kunst der Frechheit/Comic Grotesque: Wit and Mockery in German Arts, 1870-1940. In contrast to the ahistorical and amorphous concept informing the exhibition, Thomas O. Haakenson reveals a unique deployment of the artistic grotesque that targeted specific established and emerging scientific discourses at the turban of the last fin-de-siècle.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501369940
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/29/2022
Series: New Directions in German Studies
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.57(d)

About the Author

Thomas O. Haakenson is Associate Professor in Critical Studies and Visual Studies at California College of the Arts in San Francisco and Oakland, USA. He is coeditor of the book series Visual Cultures and German Contexts and has been published widely, including in New German Critique, Cabinet, Rutgers Art Review, German Studies Review, and the anthologies Legacies of Modernism, Spectacle, Representations of German Identity, as well as Memorialization in Germany Since 1945. He has received awards and fellowships from the United States Fulbright Program, the Social Science Research Council, the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, and the Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Note on Style and Sources
List of Figures
1. The Returban of the Grotesque
2. The Science of Berlin Dada: Salomo Friedländer, Walter Benjamin, and the Grotesque
3. The Architectonics of Public Science: “Learning to See” in Rudolf Virchow's Museum of Pathology
4. Sexuality ad oculos: Sigmund Freud and Magnus Hirschfeld Meet Til Brugman's “Celluloid Children”
5. The Optics of Evidence: Photography and Vision in Berlin Anthropology
6. Visual Objectivity Meets Impossible Object: Hannah Höch “From an Ethnographic Museum” Photomontages
7. Learning to See Grotesquely
Coda: Toward a Critique of the Dogma of Visuality
Bibliography
Index

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